Does Page Count Affect Your Decision To Read A Book Or Not?
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Re: Does Page Count Affect Your Decision To Read A Book Or N
lady_charlie wrote:MandiKenendy wrote:It all depends on my mood. Sometimes, if I want to read a book in an evening then I pick a reasonably short one so I can get it done. I don't think it effects the quality of a book. Sometimes you read a short book and wish it was longer and sometimes a long book drags on.
Yes!
I think you said that better than anyone.
Yes yes yes, I like to read a slimish novel, anything over 250 pages I stay clear, I have comited myself now and then and I am very pleased when the novel has finished. Most are too long at any rate,I also find the longer novels are to weighty for this senior reader.

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When I think about it, it seems that most characters and story lines are not well developed until a book reaches about 175 pp.
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I have read some good ones that were shorter but,I was always left feeling that there was not enough to it,so that is why I will no longer even bother with them.
I would never go to a restaurant with the intention of leaving after just having an apetizer,and I feel the same about my books.I want to feel closure[unless it's first in a series] and fulfilled after finishing the book, not like I didn't satisfy my hunger or get my money's worth at all!
Yes, of course there are novels of 300-400 pages that are not good books,but the same can be said of short stories,as well.
I am 62 years old and have been an avid reader since childhood,and I have just found in my experience to be much more satisfied with books with that 288 page minimum.
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Everyone to their own ... I've often gone to a restaurant & just had an appetizer & a coffee or maybe just a dessert & a coffee. A well written short story is great for a coffee break read or a short bus ride and an 800 or 900 page novel is the real McCoy for a long flight or a few days at the beach. Totally different genre but in both cases it is the skill & talent of the author that defines their success.
For me time, circumstance & mood dectate my choice.


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Just curious, any reason why 288 and not 300? : )
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Just curious, any reason why 288 and not 300? : )[/quote]MandiKenendy wrote:I am 62 years old and have been an avid reader since childhood,and I have just found in my experience to be much more satisfied with books with that 288 page minimum.[/color][/b]
I would have to say that for some odd reason it just so happens that I have read many books including one long 13 book series where each book had that number of pages,and I was pleasantly suprised how that number was perfectly adequate,so that is when[back in late 2008] I set that number as my minimum page count.

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Not to despair. I currently have four books in the hopper. Page counts are 290,301, 375, and 379. I think I've already indicated that it takes over a hundred pages just to develop characters well. Thereafter, an author is able to move toward conclusion.booklvr62 wrote:Well it seems that I am pretty much all alone in my determination to avoid books of less than 288 pgs.LOL!....I am 62 years old and have been an avid reader since childhood,and I have just found in my experience to be much more satisfied with books with that 288 page minimum.
It does seem there is a tendency toward shorter books. I had a grad professor who used to mock this tendency by talking about "large print, wide spaces, lots of pictures".

Age is a factor I believe, as you intimate. (I'm 60.) Until the nineties, acquisition of information was a chore. It required a drive to the library, opening the card catalogue with notepad in hand, looking up and writing down endless reference data, walking into the stacks, pulling the books, searching indexes and tables of contents---just to determine which was the right book(s) to check out. Today, information is fingertip. As a for instance: today I wanted to know how many Olympic torches were produced for the 1984 games. With Google's help, I had that answer on my I-pad within five minutes, along with the detailed history of all the torches produced for each Olympics since 1928. Additionally, I had videos to go with the information.
Unfortunately, booklvr62, there is some uncertain, nebulous date in time, after which those born have a tendency toward the craving for instant satisfaction. Cars have to go faster and books have to be shorter. I am grateful that there are many on this board who are not so afflicted--they could be, but choose other.
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That having been said, my nose is really out of joint at how the physical appearance of books has changed. The publishers are making them smaller width-wise, so a book that appears to have a certain number of pages is, in my world, sadly shortened. To me, reading is just the last step in enjoying a book - I have to smell it while riffling through (come on, admit you do that too) and scan how it's layed out. Short paragraphs are a red flag to me; somehow I feel that the author is being too sensational. (One time I even read a novel that used two exclamation points on the same sentence!!)
One of the rules of writing and reading is that when you become aware of the author instead of the story, it's not well-written.
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Actually, I'm with you on this one. I don't read short stories, and I don't tend to read 'thin' books. I've really never thought about it before, but this thread has brought it to my attention. So I guess I am a skinny-book discriminator. Yikes.booklvr62 wrote:Well it seems that I am pretty much all alone in my determination to avoid books of less than 288 pgs.

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